List of chiropterans
is an order of flying placental mammals. Members of this order are called chiropterans, or bats. The order comprises 1318 extant species, which are grouped into 226 genera. The second largest order of mammals after rodents, bats comprise about 20% of all mammal species worldwide. The majority of bats live in South and Central America, Africa, and southern and Southeast Asia, but the order can be found in most of the world outside of Antarctica and the arctic. They live in a variety of habitats, particularly forests and caves but also grasslands, savannas, shrublands, wetlands, deserts, and rocky areas. With their forelimbs adapted as wings, they are the only mammals capable of sustained flight. They range in length from Kitti's hog-nosed bat, at, to the great flying fox, at. Bat wings are relatively proportionate to their size, with the large flying fox having the largest overall wingspan, up to.
Chiroptera is divided into two suborders: Yangochiroptera and Yinpterochiroptera. The suborders are further subdivided into clades and families. Yangochiroptera contains 14 families grouped into three superfamilies: Emballonuroidea, containing the sheath-tailed and slit-faced bats; Noctilionoidea, containing the smoky, mustached, short-tailed, sucker-footed, bulldog, leaf-nosed, and disk-winged bats; and Vespertilionoidea, consisting of the wing-gland, bent-winged, free-tailed, funnel-eared, and vesper bats. Yinpterochiroptera includes seven families grouped into two superfamilies: Pteropodoidea, consisting of the fruit bats, and Rhinolophoidea, containing the hog-nosed, Old World leaf-nosed, false vampire, horseshoe, trident, and mouse-tailed bats. The exact organization of the species is not fixed, with many recent proposals made based on molecular phylogenetic analysis. Nine species have been recorded as going extinct since 1500 CE.
Conventions
The author citation for the species or genus is given after the scientific name; parentheses around the author citation indicate that this was not the original taxonomic placement. Range maps are provided wherever possible; if a range map is not available, a description of the collective range of species in that genera is provided. Ranges are based on the International Union for Conservation of Nature Red List of Threatened Species unless otherwise noted. All extinct genera or species listed alongside extant species went extinct after 1500 CE, and are indicated by a dagger symbol "".Classification
The order Chiroptera consists of 1318 extant species belonging to 226 genera. This does not include hybrid species or extinct prehistoric species. Modern molecular studies indicate that the 226 genera can be grouped into 21 families; these families are divided between two named suborders and are grouped in those suborders into named clades, and some of these families are subdivided into named subfamilies. An additional nine species have been recorded as going extinct since 1500 CE: three in the family Vespertilionidae, and six in the family Pteropodidae.Suborder Yangochiroptera
- Superfamily Emballonuroidea
- * Family Emballonuridae
- ** Subfamily Emballonurinae : 12 genera, 36 species
- ** Subfamily Taphozoinae : 2 genera, 18 species
- * Family Nycteridae : 1 genus, 16 species
- Superfamily Noctilionoidea
- * Family Furipteridae : 2 genera, 2 species
- * Family Mormoopidae : 2 genera, 11 species
- * Family Mystacinidae : 1 genus, 2 species
- * Family Myzopodidae : 1 genus, 2 species
- * Family Noctilionidae : 1 genus, 2 species
- * Family Phyllostomidae
- ** Subfamily Carolliinae : 1 genus, 8 species
- ** Subfamily Desmodontinae : 3 genera, 2 species
- ** Subfamily Glossophaginae : 16 genera, 37 species
- ** Subfamily Glyphonycterinae : 3 genera, 5 species
- ** Subfamily Lonchophyllinae : 2 genera, 16 species
- ** Subfamily Lonchorhininae : 1 genus, 5 species
- ** Subfamily Macrotinae : 1 genus, 2 species
- ** Subfamily Micronycterinae : 2 genera, 12 species
- ** Subfamily Phyllostominae : 10 genera, 22 species
- ** Subfamily Rhinophyllinae : 1 genus, 3 species
- ** Subfamily Stenodermatinae : 20 genera, 90 species
- * Family Thyropteridae : 1 genus, 5 species
- Superfamily Vespertilionoidea
- * Family Cistugidae : 1 genus, 2 species
- * Family Miniopteridae : 1 genus, 31 species
- * Family Molossidae
- ** Subfamily Molossinae : 18 genera, 119 species
- ** Subfamily Tomopeatinae : 1 genus, 1 species
- * Family Natalidae : 3 genera, 11 species
- * Family Vespertilionidae
- ** Subfamily Kerivoulinae : 2 genera, 30 species
- ** Subfamily Murininae : 3 genera, 35 species
- ** Subfamily Myotinae : 3 genera, 121 species
- ** Subfamily Vespertilioninae : 45 genera, 278 species
- Superfamily Pteropodoidea
- * Family Pteropodidae
- ** Subfamily Cynopterinae : 15 genera, 28 species
- ** Subfamily Eidolinae : 1 genera, 2 species
- ** Subfamily Harpyionycterinae : 4 genera, 18 species
- ** Subfamily Nyctimeninae : 2 genera, 18 species
- ** Subfamily Pteropodinae : 7 genera, 81 species
- ** Subfamily Rousettinae : 13 genera, 41 species
- ** Subfamily Macroglossusinae : 5 genera, 10 species
- Superfamily Rhinolophoidea
- * Family Craseonycteridae : 1 genus, 1 species
- * Family Hipposideridae : 7 genera, 86 species
- * Family Megadermatidae : 6 genera, 6 species
- * Family Rhinolophidae : 1 genus, 92 species
- * Family Rhinonycteridae : 4 genera, 9 species
- * Family Rhinopomatidae : 1 genus, 6 species
Fossil genera
- Aegyptonycteris
- Ageina
- Altaynycteris
- Archaeonycteris
- Archaeopteropus
- Australonycteris
- Cambaya
- Carcinipteryx
- Chambinycteris
- Cryptobune
- Dizzya
- Eppsinycteris
- Hassianycteris
- Honrovits
- Icaronycteris
- Jaegeria
- Khonsunycteris
- Khoufechia
- Lapichiropteryx
- Marnenycteris
- Microchiropteryx
- Mixopteryx
- Necromantis
- Onychonycteris
- Palaeochiropteryx
- Palaeophyllophora
- Philisis
- Premonycteris
- Protonycteris
- Protorhinolophus
- Pseudorhinolophus
- Pseudovespertiliavus
- Sonor
- Tanzanycteris
- Vaylatsia
- Vespertiliavus
- Vielasia
- Volactrix
- Witwatia
- ''Xylonycteris''
Chiropterans